Cheung, Katherine, 1904-2003

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Cheung, Katherine, 1904-2003

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Surname :

Cheung

Forename :

Katherine

Date :

1904-2003

eng

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Cheung, Katherine Sui Fun, 1904-2003

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Surname :

Cheung

Forename :

Katherine Sui Fun

Date :

1904-2003

eng

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Ruifen, Zhang, 1904-2003

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Surname :

Ruifen

Forename :

Zhang

Date :

1904-2003

eng

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Exist Dates

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1904-12-12

12 Dec 1904

Birth

2003-09-02

2 Sep 2003

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Biographical History

Katherine Cheung (1904-2003) was born in China but moved to California at age 17 to study music. Her father would take her to Dycer Airport (Los Angeles) to practice driving a car, and during this time she became fascinated with aircraft and flying. After studying piano at University of Southern California for three years, Cheung quit school, married, and had two daughters before beginning aviation classes in 1931. She took flying lessons with the Chinese Aeronautical Association in Los Angeles; her flight instructor was Bert Ekstein, and she soloed after 12 1/2 hours of instruction. Cheung earned her license in 1932, becoming the first woman pilot of Chinese descent to earn a pilot's license in the United States. After attaining her license she started performing aerobatics at fairs and air shows in California. She also regularly entered competitive air races, including the 1936 Ruth Chatterton Derby from Los Angeles to Cleveland, and was friendly with many of the renowned aviators of the time. In 1935, Cheung obtained her international flight license, and in 1936 she became a US Citizen, although she began to contemplate returning to China to teach aviation. After Japan invaded China in 1937, she traveled to Chinese American communities across the country, raising more than $7,000 to buy a Ryan ST-A plane, which she planned to fly to China and use to train volunteer pilots. However, on the day she was accepting the aircraft from a group of her benefactors at Dycer field, her cousin crashed the aircraft, ending his life and Cheung's dream of training Chinese pilots. In 1942, when she was 38, she quit flying and operated a flower shop until her retirement in 1970. Cheung was a member of the Ninety-Nines international organization of women pilots (joined in 1935) and was inducted into the Women in Aviation International Pioneer Hall of Fame. She was presented a medal by the Chinese Consul General of Los Angeles on behalf of the Chinese government for her contributions as an aviation pioneer in 2001.

eng

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External Related CPF

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7865926

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q6376325

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People’s Republic of China

00, CN

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Thousand Oaks

CA, US

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California

CA, US

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Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

w6g8464q

87610574